Celtic Standing Ahead Of The Curve

Saturday saw the unveiling of the first standing section at a top-level football ground in the UK in over 20 years. For understandable reasons Britain has moved away from standing at major sporting events since the tragedy at Hillsborough. The Taylor report however did not specifically criticise standing as a major contributor to that disaster. Indeed one of the tragedies of that day was that it was in line with similar stadium deaths that had occurred in the UK over the previous 100 years of association football with design and layout of the Leppings Lane End allied to police actions being the biggest problem. Despite this, even in the last 6 months we’ve seen some controversy over this safe standing section when a newspaper used old of Peter Lawwell comments in an attempt to create gain a negative reaction from Hillsborough families.

Whilst Britain understandably followed the example of Rangers after the Ibrox disaster and moved towards all seated stadia as our preferred safety solution, the Germans have been championing rail seating and safe standing. In the UK we now have a generation of football fans who have known nothing but sitting at the football. My first football game was in 1974, but I have sat for over half of my life as a football fan. For the majority of fans therefore sitting is how we enjoy attending the game. There will always be some however who would prefer to stand and with standing per say not being unsafe it is surely for football clubs to try to offer supporters the viewing experience they seek?

Celtic should therefore be praised for the work they have done here. The journey to the standing corner began approximately 5 years ago and despite refusal after refusal from Glasgow City Council, the club kept asking for the ability to offer fans the match day viewing experience they wanted. Taylor’s recommendations were not enacted by legislation in Scotland as they were in England and therefore it came down to persuading the Council of the clubs argument in order for the standing section to be approved in a manner where the ground retained its safety certificate. This was granted in June 2015 and now in summer 2016 the standing section is here.

Obviously thinking back to the time when terracing tickets were cheaper than main stand tickets, I saw some asking if season books for here would be cheaper than other parts of the ground. Safe standing is one rail seat per person and therefore capacity is unchanged. Indeed terracing was cheaper because you could fit more people into the same space (unsafely). With infrastructure costs of changing from seats to rail seats, the club could have justified a price increase.

I’m getting too old to stand around and for many standing is of a by-gone time. For others it’s just the thing that football has been missing and for the initial 2,900 with season books in the standing curve, enjoy your new freedoms. I am sure over time the section will increase and Celtic will be seen as the club that kicked off a transformation of British football grounds.

JOE Cole last night described the Mestalla Stadium as one of the most intimidating he played in during his 20 year professional career - and told the Celtic fans and players they will savour taking on Valencia there in the Europa League next year.

BRENDAN Rodgers is hoping to have all five of the first team regulars who missed Celtic’s defeat to Hibernian on Sunday available for their crucial Ladbrokes Premiership games against Aberdeen at Pittodrie and Rangers at Ibrox next week.

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In the summer of 2006 a few of us decided to set up the Celticunderground website. At the time we were somewhat disillusioned at the cosy relationship between some fansites and the board which was developing and felt that we wanted to be part of something that wasn’t being influenced by the PLC. We were angry middleaged men and we weren’t going to take it anymore. Under the heading “About Us” we attempted to articulate something akin to a vision statement for the site. Looking back on what was written it’s clear that in some aspects we were spot on and in others we were hopelessly naive. The site has evolved into something that none of us could have predicted and we’d like to think that we’ll keep changing in the coming years. It might not be to everyone’s tastes but it will always be about genuine fans saying what they think because they love the club.